“We will pool our scientific,
technical and managerial talents, with sufficient financial resources, to
develop solar energy as a source of abundant energy to power our economy and to
transform the lives of our people. Our Success in this endeavor will change the
face of India. It would also enable India to help change the destinies of
people around the world.”
Those are the words of Hon. Prime minister
of India Dr. Manmohan Singh at the time of addressing National Action Plan on
Climate Change (NAPCC). Clear, determinant and encouraging speech by prime
minister turns into the action by announcing Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar
Mission (JNNSM). A mission to transform energy dependency on fossil fuel to the
renewable source of power mainly solar energy by creating the policy conditions
for its diffusion across the country as quickly as possible. Ministry of New
and Renewable Energy (MNRE) started planning to establish strong policy
framework for this mission. Before announcement of this mission India had
installed capacity of mealy 17.8 mw. It means MNRE has to establish entirely
new industry. Even though it was a hard task to develop optional power source
which is relatively costlier than conventional sources under the variating
global economic conditions. MNRE successfully manage it by implicating various
plans. And at the end of October 2012 mission crossed milestone of installed
capacity of 1000mw. Since announcement of the JNNSM, Indian solar industry has
been facing many hurdles related to the global over capacity, financial
backups, loose RPO enforcement conditions and recently born TRADE war.
The Indian Solar
(PV) Manufacturers’ Association on behalf of three Indian cell manufacturers,
namely, Indosolar, Websol Energy Systems and Jupiter Solar has filed a dumping
complaint against cell and module imports from China, the US, Malaysia and
Taiwan. This complaint was first reported on January 2012 to the Directorate
General of Anti-Dumping and Allied Duties (DGAD) at the Ministry of Commerce.
On November 23rd 2012, DGAD announced that it had found sufficient preliminary
evidence of dumping in India. And investigation has started from that day. The
‘period of investigation’ has been determined as between January 1st2011 to
June 30th2012 (18 months) as part of the investigation, any entity that is
directly impacted in any manner by the duties is referred to as an ‘interested
party’. Ac-accordingly, an ‘interested party’ can be any of the following:
domestic industry on whose complaint the proceedings are initiated, exporters
or the foreign producers of the like articles subject to investigation,
importers of the same article allegedly dumped into India, government of the
exporting countries, trade or business associations of the domestic producers or
importers of the dumped product.
Factors, which are reducing the cost of Chinese product
·
Strong governmental support
At
the beginning of 2008 Chinese government sense the future aspects of the solar
PV industry worldwide, which was the triggering point for them and accordingly
they began their massive capacity formula. Govt had given free land to the pv
manufacturers, quick clearance for the projects, large benefits in terms of 1%
-2% interest rates on loan, tax benefits on large exports, etc. due to all
these reasons Chinese companies were thrive to expand their scale and vertical
integration model.
·
Scale and vertical integration
China
has some of words largest PV manufacturing companies which cover almost half
production market worldwide. Suntech has annual production capacity of 2000 MW,
while as the total module production capacity in India is about
1.5 GW and cell capacity is about 500 MW. Chinese manufacturer are
surviving in this surplus supply circumstance, is because of their vertical
integrating chain of supply, so as per market condition they have a scope to
shift their margin along the chain. It is maintaining their flexibility in this
harsh condition.
·
excessive export volume
Some experts doubting about their export volume. According
to them, Chinese firms are selling PV modules below even the cash cost of
production. Chinese manufacturers want to show high export numbers so that
state-owned banks do not call in their loans and in the hope that they will
eventually be given a debt waiver.
,,,,,,,,,, TO BE CONTINUED
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